N OVELTI E5 anc/ Ofhet Rate F/o wets' 
Gaillardia grandiFlora, Goblin 
PERENNIAL 
This Gaillardia will bloom the first year if sown 
by early March. Specially suitable for perennial 
borders. The dwarf plants are 12 to 18 inches high, 
with close, bushy foliage that is almost entirely 
hidden by the mass of blooms which are bright yel¬ 
low with a deep little zone. Pkt. 75 cts., 3 pkts. $2. 
Draba Haynaldi 
Draba Haynaldi 
A grand little spring plant, forming small, globular 
rosettes which cover themselves in March and April 
with bright yellow flower-clusters. This is a lovely 
plant for crevices in the rock-garden, but will thrive 
almost anywhere that it has well-drained, porous 
soil. Moisture should be kept off during mid¬ 
summer and over winter. Pkt. 75 cts. 
Gypsophila cerastioides 
PERENNIAL 
Thick, broad cushions of downy foliage and 
great masses of flowers which would be pure white 
were it not for a thin purple vein running down 
each snowy petal. This faint marking adds to the 
charm of an unusual plant. Try it in a sunny spot 
in the rock-garden. See illustration on page 14. Pkt. 
75 cts. Plants, $1.75 for 3, $2.75 for 6, $5 per doz. 
Gilia coronopifolia 
BIENNIAL 
A showy biennial growing to a height of 4 feet, 
with long spikes of orange-scarlet flowers. Valuable 
for a mass of color. If started early indoors it will 
bloom the first season. Pkt. 50 cts. 
Gaillardia grandiflora, Goblin 
Hollyhock, Annual, Double 
Scarlet Beauty 
Fully double flowers of the Chater type, which 
come within 6 months from time seed is sown. The 
large blooms are intense scarlet and closely spaced 
on long spikes. It is a perennial which blooms the 
first year from seed. Pkt. 50 cts. 
Gilia coronopifolia 
Michauxia campanuloides. Improved 
HARDY BIENNIAL 
This little-known plant is worthy of a place in every 
garden, and the special strain that we are now able to 
distribute is a great improvement on anything hitherto 
offered. The flowers are of waxy whiteness, and re¬ 
semble in form that attractive plant Gloriosa superhn. 
Some visitors to our trial-grounds have also likened it 
to a Lilium species. Bushy, well-branched plants, 5 to 
6 feet high, produce freely a large number of flowers 
which appear not only in the normal way, at the end 
of the flower-spikes, but in unexpected places, such as, 
for instance, the axils of the stems. We feel sure this 
new strain of Michauxia will become a firm favorite 
when better known. Pkt. 50 cts. 
618 Madison Avenue, New York City 
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